Pool room business is down across the board. Even in states that allow smoking in pool rooms.
Does anyone ever count the number of people LOST because of pool rooms being smoking? There are a lot of people who refuse to go to pool rooms because of the smoking.
Logically, one would think it would be a good idea for the pool industry to get on board with the growing trend, rather than fight tooth and nail to appeal to a shrinking, demographic. Less and less people are smoking. Less youth are taking it up as a habit than in the past. There are less smokers now, than at any point previously. The majority of potential customers are non-smokers, NOT smokers.
Why on Earth would the pool world keep on chasing after what will eventually become a small minority of people? That's not a strategy for long term success. Going after a demographic that will be almost obsolete.
Answer: Because they are short-sighted. They see the initial losses and don't see the potential growth. Pool rooms are and have been associated with smoking. They are also one of the last businesses and places to switch over or in many places, still have smoking. Because of that, perceptions and culture has not adapted yet. It takes time. Now is a very bad time for these laws to take effect, forcing pool rooms to change or adapt in the middle of a depression for pool rooms.
There's a lot of hysteria out there. Does a smoking ban keep people from going to bars and clubs? Do people just stop drinking? Do they stop going out? Of course not. I've been to places that are non-smoking but that have full liquor bars. There's PLENTY of people drinking. There's PLENTY of people who want to get trashed who have no interest in smoking or who smoke.
Is not liquor the #1 source of income for pool rooms? Yes it is.
Clinging to smokers is a recipe for disaster. Clinging to the smoking clientele is a sure way to go out of business down the road. Because their time is numbered. It's only a matter of time before these smoking laws are universal across the nation. Then what?
In states where smoking is banned most places, except for bars and pool rooms, pool rooms are actually doing well appealing to the crowd of smokers who want a place they can hang and light up a smoke. That's not a case of market forces in play, but rather manipulation by government through the use of laws. They will eventually stop smoking in these rooms and then what? Attracting that clientele will no longer work. Now comes the day of reckoning, when the pool room no longer has a clique clientele, but has to compete for "mainstream" customers of all types. They can no longer rely on being a safe-zone or island for those persecuted smokers to land.
Pool rooms are closing up all around the country. Even in smoking states, counties and cities. That has more to do with the bad economy. Don't forget, that thousands of rooms opened up in the last decade or so too. Rooms that did not exist before. They opened only because of the window of opportunity created by the various economic bubbles (dotcom, housing etcetera) and a lot of people had a lot of disposable income to go out and party. A lot of people don't have that free ATM anymore with their stocks or their home equity, and naturally there is a retraction.
Rooms that had a business model that survived prior to the bubble boom, are still surviving now. The only thing hurting them is the high cost of rent. But that is crushing all store front businesses.
The sooner pool rooms can adapt to non-smoking, the better. The sooner they can find a away to attract or bring back people who weren't strictly smokers, the better. It's going to be a long painful process for that industry to rebuild image and get new customers. The smoking-ban movement has been going on for at least 20 years. It's unfortunate that pool is the last one out, because all other businesses have had to adapt a long time ago and have figured it out. They also have many customers that might have been pool players.
If pool rooms really die off as a result, and cannot adapt or appeal to non-smokers - what can anyone say at that point? Maybe pool's time is up?